1 / 13

Disasters: Improving the evidence base for prevention, resilience and emergency responses

Disasters: Improving the evidence base for prevention, resilience and emergency responses. Wednesday 13 October 2010 UN International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction. The aims of the conference were to:

rad
Télécharger la présentation

Disasters: Improving the evidence base for prevention, resilience and emergency responses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Disasters: Improving the evidence base for prevention, resilience and emergency responses Wednesday 13 October 2010 UN International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction

  2. The aims of the conference were to: • create an environment in which the ‘disasters community’, whether from private sector, academia, non-governmental organisations or government, can learn about existing initiatives, share their work and • discover better ways to coordinate and collaborate with each other to tackle the impact of climate or environmental change on their work.

  3. UK review initiatives • DFID Humanitarian Emergency Response Review • House of Common’s inquiry into scientific advice and evidence in emergencies • UKCDS Societal Impacts of Natural Hazards –UK and international research programme review

  4. Key note speaker • Andrew Maskrey Senior Coordinator for the UNISDR Global Assessment Report on Disaster Reduction • Increasing exposure of vulnerable people • Need to address underlying drivers of risk • Poor urban governance • Ecosystem decline • Vulnerable rural livelihoods

  5. Integrated Research on Disaster Risk addressing the challenge of natural and human-induced environmental hazards Hazards: Storms, floods, droughts, slides, earthquakes, volcanoes, .... Effects of human activities on creating or enhancing disasters, including land-use practices An integrated approach to research on disaster risk through: an international, multidisciplinary (natural, health, engineering and social sciences, including socio-economic analysis) collaborative research programme.

  6. Objective 1: Characterization of hazard, vulnerability and risk 1.1: Identifying hazards and vulnerabilities leading to risks 1.2: Forecasting hazards and assessing risks 1.3: Dynamic modelling of risk Objective 2: Effective Decision-Making in Complex and Changing Risk Contexts 2.1: Identifying relevant decision-making systems and their interactions 2.2: Understanding decision-making in the context of environmental hazards 2.3: Improving the quality of decision-making practice Objective 3: Reducing Risk and Curbing Losses Through Knowledge-Based Actions 3.1: Vulnerability assessments 3.2: Effective approaches to risk reduction

  7. Cross-Cutting Theme - Regional Networks and Capacity building

  8. Societal impacts of natural disasters Led by Roger Few & Jenni Barclay UEA • Mapping of UK and international research funding programmes to inform funders strategies • Consultation with experts on future research needs and innovations in researching funding mechanisms • Links and relationships to frameworks such as IRDR • Will report February 2010 - r.few@uea.ac.uk

  9. Tom Mitchell – Launched DFID funded Strengthening Climate Resilience: an introduction to climate smart disaster risk management • Working with Christian Aid, Plan International, 3 regions 10 countries devised 3 pillars on how to: access info on climate risk; harness adaptive capacity; address causes of poverty • Need for evidence translators, using young scholars, problem of scaling up, green recovery, work with all stakeholders, adaptation at grass roots

  10. ELRHA - 2 case studies • Earthquakes in Indonesia, Shelter programming in a changing environment • Enthusiastic discussion about simplifying complex science for communities to make decisions and critical role of a translator/facilitator. Practical activities to respond to needs and improve capacity at local level

  11. What have we learnt and what should we do next? • Science is only part of the jigsaw • Managing risks requires trade-offs at house or government level • Does increased investment in science save more lives? • Different accountability for scientists and NGOs, language difficulty, career structures • Future threats eg red sludge in Hungary • Where is industry – insurance, communications?

  12. Funder/policy evening discussion • Commitments to work together at UK level – possibly a centre of excellence • Contributions to international discussions • What are the gaps – review awaited • Funder discussions for future - mechanisms • CBHA and UKCDS meeting • Use existing structures – no new ones!

  13. Conference report to go on all websites with actions and recommendation www.ukcds.org.uk www.elrha.org

More Related